'.i.'i;;.ii-'.'';'.i;i''it'ffl COL. A. K. McCLURE, Of I'ennsylvauiff, •^M.^ LEISURE HOUR Vol. VII. DECEMBER, 1871. No. III. SKETCHES OF PEOMINENT PUBLIC MEN. N0MBEE FIFTY-FODS. BY J. TRAINOR KING, COL. A. K. McCLUKE. " Fortune a godrless is to fools alone, The wise are always masters of their own." If the life-history of any man in the State illustrates Dryden's idea, as above expressed, it is that of Col. Alexander K. McClure, the present and fifty-fourth subject of our series. Col. McClure's life has been made up of trials and triumphs, yet he has never fawned upon the " fickle goddess " for her smiles, nor bowed beneath her frowns. He comes of a robust race of moun- taineers, of Scotch-Irish descent, without the "guinea's stamp," but with one more indelible, more honorable — that of true manhood. He was born January 9th, 1828, among the mountains of Perry County, Pennsylvania. His early schooling was of too meagre a nature to justify mention; perhaps more detri- mental than advantageous. At fifteen years of age he was apprenticed to the tanning trade. At eighteen his time had expired, and being pronounced au fait by his master, he started out as a journeyman. In 1846 he visited this city in the pursuit of his calling, extending his "tramp" to New York and New England. The same fall, however, he returned to his native county, and embarked in the more congenial avocation of newspaper publisher, estab- lishing The Juniata Sentinel, at Mifiiin. This opened a more fascinating field for his grasping mind, and he concentrated all his powers of thought, not only upon its managerial and editorial intricacies, but the practical working of the composing room, and in one year's time had sufiiciently mastered the latter to assume the foremanship, and get out his paper with the assistance of an £-pprentice. Here, then, before he was twenty, he was master of two practical trades, and an editor well versed in politics, at least local. At the instance of Joseph B. Meyers and Henry White, of Philadelphia, he was, oa his twenty-first birthday, appointed Aid to Gov. Wm. F. Johnston, and herbce his title of Colonel. In 1850 he was appointed Deputy United States Mar- shal for Juniata County. This appointment was, perhaps, mainly attributable to the influimce he wielded through the Sentinel, which had, by this time,, gained quite an extended circulation and conquered a decided success. 7 I f^ Sa LEISURE HOURS. In 1852 he purchased the Chambershurg Repository, which he enlarged and soon gave a State-wide circulation and influence. In 1853, when only twenty- five years of age, he was nominated on the Whig ticket for Auditor-General, but the State being at that time largely democratic, he was defeated by Hon. Ephraim Banks, the Democratic candidate. In 1855 he was voluntarily appointed Superintendent of Public Printing by Governor Pollock. This position he resigned after having served eight months. The same year, having studied law with William McLellan, Esq., of Chambershurg, he was admitted to the bar, and became the law partner of his preceptor. In 1856 he received another appointment from Governor Pollock — that of Superintendent of the Erie and Northeast Railroad, to settle the riots which had been so productive of mischief for a year previous in the City of Erie. He succeeded in adjusting the difficulties promptly and finally, to the great relief of the peaceful and more progressive citizens of Erie and to his own credit. The same year he was a delegate to the National Republican Con- vention, which nominated Fremont and Dayton for President and Vice- President, and made a thorough canvass of the State in behalf of the ticket. In 1857 he was one of the handful (twenty-seven, all told,) of Republican mem- bers elected to the Legislature, and from a district that gave four hundred majority against his party. In the House he took a prominent part in the sale of the public works, and in aiding the construction of the Erie Railroad. In 1858 he was returned to the House with a largely increased majority, and the following year, 1859, was chosen State Senator from his district by four hundred majority, after a most exciting and bitter contest, succeeding a democrat who had added three hundred and fifty democratic votes to the district by a new apportionment. In 1860 he was appointed Chairman of the Republican State Central Com- mittee. In this campaign he made, for the first time in the State, a thorough and complete organization in every county, township and precinct. The same year he was mentioned prominently for United States Senator, but declined to be a candidate, and supported Mr. Wilmot. When the war broke out he was in the Senate, and was made Chairman of the Committee on Military Affairs— a position he filled with intelligent dis- crimination. During that trying period of our national existence, he gave a most unselfish and cordial support to the National and State Governments, and was author of most important war measures in his place in the Senate. In 1862 he was solicited by President Lincoln and Secretary Stanton to make the draft in Pennsylvania, and, with two clerks, he had the State enrolled, credits adjusted, draft made and seventeen regiments in the field in sixty days. To give him the military authority to make the draft he was commissioned Assistant Adjutant-General of the United States. This he resigned as soon as the work was completed. In 1863 he declined the Chairmanship of the Republican State Central Committee, but gave his undivided time and best energies during the cam- paign for Governor Curtin's re-election. In 1864 he was elected delegate at large to the Republican National Convention, and was formally requested by three-fourths of the delegates of the State Convention to accept the Chair- LEISURE HOURS. 83 manship i^ "'•' 5tate Committee. He declined this to accept the nomination for the Legislature from a new district, which was strongly Democratic. He was elected by four hundred majority. After the defeat of his party in October of that year, and at the special request of President Lincoln, he came to Philadelphia to aid in organizing, or perfecting the organization, for the Presidential election to follow in Novem- ber. The same year, in July, Lee's army, in its invasion of and detour in Pennsylvania, destroyed all his property, near Chambersburg, amounting to $76,000. To do this it even went out of its way, as if with special intent to leave him homeless, as a punishment for his ardent support of the National Government. In 1867 he left Chambersburg, and spent the summer in the Rocky Moun- tains for the benefit of his wife and son's health. On his return he located in Philadelphia, in the practice of the law, and soon after published a work on his travels in the new Territories. He was Chairman of the Pennsylvania delegation in the National Repub- lican Convention that nominated General Grant for President, and advocated the claims of Governor Curtin for Vice-President, in a speech of great power and earnestness. During that campaign he devoted his entire time to the canvass of Pennsylvania, until after the October election, when he stumped Connecticut, Rhode Island and Massachusetts under direction of the National Committee. He made his last political speech in 1869, for Governor Jewell, in Connecticut; although he really withdrew from active participation in politics after the Presidential contest in 1868, ten years of incessant labor in politics having completely broken him down in health and pocket; and besides these reasons, amounting almost to necessities, for a more qtfiet and profitable life, he considered the great issues of the war settled by that election, and the responsibilities resting upon him as a loyal citizen discharged. Col. McClure gave more time and made more sacrifices for the Repub- lican party in the days when hard work was needed than, perhaps, any man in the State, and he did it for principle and not to feather his own nest. Though an acknowledged leader, and a bold and unvanquishable defender of its doc- trines, he never allowed his name to be used in connection with any of the great remunerative offices in its gift. He was Mr. Lincoln's most trusted political adviser in Pennsylvania, and a bosom friend of Governor Curtin. He was a loorldng member of the Whig and Republican parties, from 1849 to 1868. and never missed being present at a State Convention in all the years intervening. As a representative man he literally towered over liis fellows ; sitting in his seat in a state of apparent indifference to the thunder of this member, or the rhetoric of that, his herculean form would suddenly bolt up and in words, few but conclusive, he would demolish the beautiful fabric of the rhetorician, or bring the Jupiter down to mundane realities. His great speeches were, however, carefully digested, and delivered with the power of eloquence and earnestness for which he is characterized. Chief among these were those in favor of a liberal policy of improvements; in aid of the Sunbury and Erie Railroad, and in the repeal of the unjust tax upon onnage, a repeal by which the commerce of Philadelphia was greatly enlarged. 84 LEISURE HOURS. His i>olitical speeches defined the policy of his party in thePT-ying time when the outbreak of war gave birth to the most delicate and complex ques- tions. His last great speech in the Legislature was in 1865, in support of the thirteenth amendment, abolishing slavery. His campaign speeches are too familiar to our readers for special reference. As a specimen of his powers as an extemporaneous speaker, we make the following extract from a response to a toast given at Governor Curtin's ban- quet, June 12th, 1869, after Col. McClure had retired from public life. The response was to the toast — "The Young Eepublicans of 1860." We quote as follows : "Nine years ago the young Eepublicans of Pennsylvania made him (Gov. Curtin.) their chieftain, and since then he has had no rival in their confidence and love. Through evil and good report, whether in power or sceptreless, with them, 'where sits MacDonald, theie is the head of the table.' Others have brightened and fiided, have climbed and fallen, but his name and his record have inspired the earnest men in every conflict. The retrospect of their achievements covers less than a decade. They have had perpetual battle. Whoever gathered the laurels of their victories, whether worthily conferred, or won in dishonor and worn in shame, it was their task to com- plete the work they had so bravely begun. They have fought the great fight, until the full fruition of the country's sacrifices in war is realized in the sublimest fabric of human government ever reared by man or blessed by heaven. It was a mighty struggle, and priceless were the offerings on the altar of freedom. By scores of thousands M'e count our dead, our maimed, our widowed and our fatherless; and among those who enjoy with us the blessings for which our martyrs died, how sadly eyes are dimmed, how deeply brows are furrowed, how locks are silvered, and strong forms bowed in the crucible of a nation's redemption. Sooner for some, later for others, and not long hence for all, we shall surrender our now unstained inheritance to those who will preserve, in growing power and grandeur, our perfected liberty and justice for future generations. There will be noble names recorded with noble deeds, to inspire those who come after us with the highest devotion to free institutions; and even the humble and forgotten in the pages of man's most illustrious annals have their proud reward, that they filled the measure of their duty in maintaining that 'government of the people, by the people, and for the people, shall not perish from the earth.' " In these sketches we have not aimed to discover greatness " hid beneath a holly." We prefer that the public should first make the discovery ; it is more likely to do so than an humble individual. Therefore, when we say that Col. McClure is a great political leader, a man of extraordinary ability as a public speaker, lecturer and expounder of law, we express not our own opinion, but that of the public. Men may differ with him politically, but all accord to him the honor of exalted thought, clear comprehension, earnest intent, and patriotic devotion to principle. No man in the State, if we may except General Cameron, has figured so conspicuously in the political arena, and none stand before the world with a clearer record. In personal appearance he is commanding. He would be singled out of a LEISURE HOURS. 85 tlionsand as "Alec." McClure from description alone, and from his presence would be noted as a man of decided calibre. Six feet and two inches in height, powerfully built, and without being corpulent or even fleshy, weighing two hundred pounds and over, with a massive head and expressive face, it is little wonder he* attracts attention and admiration. All great men are peculiar, otherwise they would be ordinary. His leading peculiarity is seeming indifference to surroundings, or rather, taking minute account of what is going on around him, and at the same time writing or holding con- verse with one or more persons. In the Senate, as we have before intimated, while having appeared wholly absorbed in the work before him, during the discussion of some knotty question, he would, when the proper time arrived, rise in place and take up the points gone over, seriatim, and dissect them and the arguments in their favor as thorouglily as if he had had his whole mind bent on the subject. This trait was rehearsed to us by Hon. George Connell in his lifetime, and was accounted by him a most wonderful attribute. The same gentleman, himself, by the way, one of the brightest lights that ever illumined the Senate chamber, paid Col. McClure the compliment of having more brains than any man in the State. Col. McClure is highly social, and delights in spending his leisure hours in the company of genial friends; and being possessed of fine conversational powers, and a well-stored mind, he is ever a welcome guest. He is a warm friend and a relentless enemy. Like a woman, he either loves or hates. Slow to form an opinion, he rarely changes one. and the same in his attach- ments. In this he would seem to have followed the counsel of Polonius — "The friends thou hast and their adoption tried, Grapple them to thy soul with hooks of steel." Aside from this, a characteristic of the race from which he springs, he is largelv individual. 'G^ CHARLES CAEEOLL OF OAEROLLTON. This worthy gentleman and distinguished philanthropist, was the last of the signers of the Declaration of Independence to be summoned to the tomb. He was born at Annapolis, Md., September 8, 1737, 0. S., and at eight years of age was taken to France to receive an education. Having remained there twelve years, he visited London and directed his attention to the study of law, and in 1764 he returned to Maryland richly qualified for the important duties which subsequently he discharged with so much credit to himself and honor to his country. He was one of the intrepid champions who opposed the Stamp Act in 1765, and in 1771-2 he entered the arena of public con- troversy with the provincial secretary on the subject of the governor's pro- clamation, in which he had commanded all officers not to take any greater fees than therein expressed. In this contest he came off triumphant, and the obnoxious proclamation was suspended on a gallows and then burnt by the common hangman. Mr. Carroll was one of the commissioners who visited Canada in 1776, to induce that province to join the colonies in declaring themselves free and independent, and on his return to Philadelphia he found the subject of independence under discussion in Congress, and that 86 LEISURE HOURS. the Maryland delegates had been directed to refuse it their sanction. Not being a member of Congress at that time, he hastened to the convention, then sitting in Annapolis, and in his own seat in that body advocated the independent cause with such success that the convention not only gave new instructions to their delegates, but elected Mr. Carroll as a member of Con- gress with them, with full instructions to espouse and defend the cause of independence. The next day after he took his seat as a member of that body, "a second resolution was adopted, directing the Declaration to be engrossed on parch- ment, and signed by all the members, which was accordingly done on the second of August. As Mr. Carroll had not given a vote on the adt ption of that instrument, he was asked by the President if he would sign it? 'Most willingly,' he replied, and immediately affixed his name to that record of glory, which has endeared him to his country, and rendered his name immortal. He was a member of the U. S. Senate from 1788 to 1791, from which time until 1801 he was an active member of the Senate of his native State." The editor of the Boston Courier, having enjoyed an interview with him a short time previous to his death, thus describes him : "As we entered his parlor Mr. Carroll arose to salute us with the cus- tomary compliments, and offered chairs with almost as much ease and firmness as a man of fifty. His under-dress was of brown broad-cloth — his waistcoat of the fashion of the last century. He wore no coat, but a gown of the same material as the waistcoat and small clothes. His hair was of a silvery white- ness — his teeth apparently perfect — his eyes animated and sparkling, though, as he stated, they had become too dim to enable him to read. His hearing did not seem to be in the least degree impaired. He spoke with ease, articu- lated with uncommon distinctness, and his voice possessed all the clearness of vigorous manhood. "The character of this revered patriot we shall not attempt to portray; its sublime simplicity we feel our incompetency to describe. Nor is it in the compass of our ability to express the emotions we felt when our hand was cordially pressed in that which, more than half a century ago, set its signa- ture to an instrument that certified the birth of a nation, and placed on the declaration of our freedom the seal of eternity." He died on the 14th of November, 1832, aged 95 years. If the best man's faults were written on his forehead, it would make hitu pull his hat over his eyes. " Never give up," is an excellent maxim ; but it means not that we should always hold on in the same way, as the many take it, but in some way: in the same, if we can, and find it good ; but in some other, if we cannot, and find it better. A New York politician, in writing a letter of condolence to the widow of a "country member" who had been his friend, said: "I am pained to hear that Mr. Sorrybones has gone to heaven. We were bosom friends, but now we shall never meet again." McCLURE-GRAY CAMPAIGN. -^ mmm >- ;¥il Se&mtestiil P£gii£@i, 1873. THE loeLUBE-^GRAY gEIATORIAL mmi Hon. George Connell was elected to the Senate for the fifth term, on the 10th day of October, 1871, by the people of the Fourth Senatorial District of Philadelphia, and on the 27th day of October he died, leaving the Senate stand a tie politi- cally. Important as it was politically, and to facilitate legis- lation, to have the vacancy filled, a writ could not be issued by the Speaker of the Senate for a special election until the returns were ofiicially transmitted to the Senate on the first Tuesday of January. As soon as the Legislature met, Speaker Brodhead issued the writ for an election, to be held on Tuesday, the 30th of January, 1872. Prior to the meeting of the Legislature, there was much discussion and active canvassing among Republican politicians in the district, as to the proper candidate for the party to adopt. Among other names that of A. K. McClure was ur^^ed by some of the more independent members of the party. The Germantown Telegraph, one of the oldest and most influ- ential of the Philadelphia weeklies, took up the suggestion, and practically opened the McClure campaign by the following editorial in that journal of the 6th day of December last: 2 THE STATE SENATE. The notable scheme of the Chairman of the Democratic State Central Committee to secure control of the Senate of the Commonwealth in defiance of the popular will has come to crief. The mandamus nnanimouslv granted by the Supreme Court compelled the recusant return judge to sign the certi- ficate of Mr. Weakly, the Republican Senator-elect from the Cumberland and Franklin district, or go to jail; and the afore- said iudc'e, with every willingness to cheat Mr. Weakly out of his seat by withholding his certificate, but with a decided dislike for imprisonment, signed the document. This makes the Senate a tie, which it would not haye been but for the atrocious frauds in the Luxeme district, where a Republican Senator- elect was deliberately cyphered out of his election. The future complexion of the Senate will now depend upon the choice of a successor to the late Mr. Connell in the Fourth District of Philadelphia, and as ^Ir. C. had seven thousand majority, the result cannot be in doubt. Some influential journals have earnestly exhorted the people of the district to elect CoL Alexander K. McClure to fill this yacancy, and per- sonally we know of no man whom we should feel more pleasure in supporting. But there are some diSculties in the way. This Senatorial District is so oyerwhelmingly in favor of the renomisation of President Grant, and of sustaininj: his adminis- c trative measures as well as those of Congress, that it would seem rather ridiculous for it to send to the Stare Senate a gentleman who, with all his acknowledged ability and public services, has not concealed his dissatisfaction with the existing order of thin gs. It is true that during the last election Col. McClure render e*! a? much effective service for the Republican cause as any man in the State, and perhaps he may have changed hia yiews somewhat. If so we should be glad to hear from him, and so woold the people of the district. We are heartily tired of small men in the Legislature, and should be proud to hare such a Senator as McClure, for we believe that he would serve tte interests of the district faithfully. The Republican force? in the Senate seem to stand very much in need of a bold and able leader, such as Col. McClure was when last there; and if the difficulty spoken of above could be removed, we believe the Colonel would be gladly accepted by the district. To the foreo-oins: Mr. McCIure answered as follows: Philadelphia, December 14, 1571. Col. p. R. Freas, Editor Germaxtowx Telegraph : My Bear Sir : — I was absent from home for some days, and missed your paper of the 6th inst. Since my return my atten- tion has been called to your leading editorial of that date, in which you discuss my position as a possible candidate for State Senator in the Fourth District, and state that you and the people of the district would " be glad to hear" from me on the subject of President Grant's renomination. My assumed pre- ference for another than Grant as the next Republican stand- ard-bearer, is treated as a difl&culty in the way of my election to the Senate. For the kind and quite too flattering notice you take of my humble public services in the past, I thank you, and permit me to say in all candor that I have not proposed myself as a candidate for the vacant Senatorship, and will not do so. The strongest personal considerations make any political position undesirable to me. If imposed upon me as a public duty, I should accept it upon the principle that no citizen can justly refuse public service when fairly required of him ; but as such duties are not common in these days of machine politics, I feel that I am not likely to be interrupted in my wish for continued retirement. I cannot controvert your statement that the people of the district are " overwhelmingly in favor of the renomination of Grant," for I am not advised on the subject. Thus far, I be- lieve, they have not given any formal, or even informal expres- sion of their choice. If I were called upon to represent their wishes as to the Presidency in a nominating convention, I should faithfully reflect their preference or return the trust to them ; but, as an humble individual, I prefer adherence to my own convictions of political duties to the approval of even so intelligent and patriotic a constituency as the people of the Fourth District. If not to prefer Grant as the next Republican nominee Avould make me " seem rather ridiculous" as a Senato- rial candidate, or interpose "difficulties in the way," I am not eligible. What the Presidential preference of a citizen has to do with the election of a State Senator, any more than the preferences of the people in the selection of their preachers or wives have to do with the same subject, I do not comprehend; but I as- sume it is so, because you say it is so. Accepting your pre- mises as correct, could a stronger reason be given for the inflexi- ble limitation of the Presidential tenure to a single term ? A State legislature is presumed to be selected to discharge cer- tain specific duties. The ambition of national candidates or the distribution of the patronage and plunder of the National Government, do not come within the scope of his public powers or actions. He is the custodian of the interests of his district and of the State to be aff"ected by legislation. He has no voice, no power beyond any other citizen of equal character, in controlling Presidential nominations, and those who would erect such new standards of eligibility, overlooking all the leo-itimate and vital purposes of legislation, must do it in defer- ence to the arbitrary exactions of power, and not in deference to enlightened public opinion. The Republican party is the party of liberal and patriotic progress. It has its wisely-constituted tribunals to decide upon its candidates and its policy, and thus define the duty of all. Until the supreme authority of the organization is invoked to reconcile its conflicting views and preferences, the utmost free- dom of conviction and expression as to both men and measures, has heretofore been claimed and conceded as the prerogative of the humblest as well as of the greatest of its advocates. — That it seems not to be so now, is one of the most significant and dangerous signs of the times — dangerous to the Republi- can party, and, tlicrefore, dangerous to the country. The administration, chosen by the Republican organization, that resents honest Republican counsel and criticism, betrays pal- pable weakness, or proclaims its power and purpose to defy the popular judgment, and either is a crime against the nation. Under our government men in official positions, from the high- est to the lowest, are but the servants, not the masters of the people. I do not prefer President Grant's renomination. It is con- fessed that the Republicans have many men who would be more competent, and, at least, equally faithful in the first civil office of the government; and I believe that they would much bettor maintain the unity and purity of the organization. Believing it, I deem it my right and my duty to say so. When the accepted authority of the party declares me to be mistaken, lean cheerfully defer to it. The Republican party has been in power in the nation. State and city for many years. We had a faithless accidental Presi- dent for a time, and our city has had a Democratic executive; but the practical power of government has been uninterrupt- edly Republican. If Republican criticism of Republican ad- ministration is an offence, why is the cry for reform not silenced ? It comes from our own long forbearing people, and not from the enemy, and it arraigns Republican, not Demo- cratic misrule. It comes up to Congress from every section of the country, for relief from oppressive taxes, from wasteful expenditures, from peculation and defalcations, and from swarms of arrogant and useless officials, whose chief employ- ment seems to be to instruct the party who it must accept for places of trust and profit, from President down to alderman. — It comes up to our Legislature from all parties in the State, and demands fundamental limitations as the only source of public safety. It comes up from the press and people of this city, as with one voice, to save private property and public credit. These are not the complaints of disappointed ambition, but the faithful criticisms of sincere men, seeking to protect and preserve their own inheritance. They do not propose political revolution, although that must come soon if they are unheeded. Thej aim to employ the Republican organization as the proper instrumentality to correct the patent and oppressive evils it has tolerated. With a system of barter and sale of Federal ap- pointments that prostitutes the civil service to the advance- ment of unworthy men ; with a system of State legislation that is a running sore and a standing reproach, and with our crush- ing city taxes and debt, both rapidly increasing without visible benefits to our people, the men who would maintain Republi- can ascendancy must remember that "faithful are the wounds of a friend." , We appear to be upon the threshold of systematic reform in our State government. It has long been battled for, but was long defeated by those who make politics a trade. AVhat fruits the people will gather for their efforts the next Legida- ture must decide. I am hopeful that a Republican Congress will not too long delay obedience to the imperative demand for civil service reform, and for the complete exercise of the supreme civil authority of the government. I need not say that reform must come in riiiladelphia — not the shadow or a mockery, but the substance that will dethrone the spoilsmen. It will come through the Republican organization, as it should, unless the already sorely-tested forbearance of the people is taught that forbearance must cease to be a virtue. la those various channels of power — the nation, State and city — fearless Republican criticism has given the Republican organization the opportunity to vindicate its fame, and attest the integrity and patriotism of its people. It stands in history as a party of honest convictions and sublime achievements; but the time is at hand when judicious and positive reform must become its accepted and avowed policy, or it must dim the lustre of its noblest deeds by self-invited destruction. 1 have frankly complied with your request to hear from me. If what I have said places me beyond the range of a Senato- rial election, I can have no personal regrets, for it will but deny me what I do not want, and I have performed my duty as I understand it. Very truly yours, A. K. McCLURE. First. Second 51 02 29 32 2i 19 9 NOMINATION OF COL. GRAY. On the 17th day of January the Republican conference met, and after an exciting contest, Henry W. Gray was nominated. The following is a statement of the several ballots: Henry W. Gray, .... Christian Knoass, .... S. A. Miller, J. N. Marks, .... Total, 113 113 Necessary to choice, 57. Mr. Gray was declared the nominee, and he appeared before the conference and delivered the following address: 3Ir. President and G-entlemen of the Convention : — Thi.s, the most honored event of my life, finds me too deeply moved to appropriately express the profound gratitude with which your action this day filled me. I ha-e, indeed, no speech that can convey to you my